5 alternative and related products to zeroheight for Sketch

Collaborative decks for creative teams

Paste is a collaborative presentation tool built for today’s creative teams that makes sharing your work simple and beautiful. From strategy decks to design handoffs, Paste works the way you do—incredibly fast, fluid, and ready for anything. Sign up on the web or download the app for iPad or iPhone.

App Store

Free

Georg Petschnigg- Georg Petschnigg, FiftyThree

Don't waste time making decks, get your team on the same page, build and illustrate a vision together. Paste is a new type of presentation tools built for Slack and mobile. It builds slides for you and is collaborative to the core. It also integrates directly with others tools like Sketch, Figma, Trello, Sheets, Google Docs, and more.

The Verge

Developer FiftyThree is best known for Paper, one of the most iconic drawing apps for the iPad since it was released in 2012. But earlier this year, the company quietly released its second major application: Paste, an incredibly nice-looking slideshow app for the web with deep integration into Slack that looked to redesign the humble slide deck for a modern,…See more

Co.Design

Four years ago, FiftyThree-the team of ex-Microsoft creatives who launched a wildly popular iPad sketching app called Paper- was flush with venture capital and full of expansion ideas that they put into action. They started producing hardware: an iPad stylus called (unluckily) Pencil. They expanded the app to work on iPhones as a Post-it-esque idea jotter.

Sketch plugin to create your Material themes symbols library

The Material Theme Editor helps you make your own branded symbol library and apply global style changes to color, shape, and typography. Currently available for Sketch, you can access the Material Theme Editor by downloading the Material Plugin.

Let's stop waging a popularity contest over design approaches and document the way we work without so much bias. If you stick around the design industry long enough, you will see design trends rise, fall, and then return. I've seen this happen numerous times during my decade-plus design career.